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Couples Challenge Texas’ Same Sex Marriage Ban in Court
February 12, 2014, at 3:11 CST
Couples Challenge Texas Same Sex Marriage Ban in Court
Couples that challenged Texas ban on same-sex marriage last falltwo women from Austin and two men from Planowere in federal court today as their lawyers made their case before U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia. Attorneys for Nicole Dimetman, Cleopatra De Leon, Mark Phariss and Vic Holmes argued in San Antonio this morning for a preliminary injunction, which would scrap Texas same-sex marriage ban while the case proceeds through the courts. After two hours of oral arguments today, theyre waiting for Judge Garcias decision, which may take a week or more.
Every day this prohibition is in place is another day these people are denied equal protection under the law, their lawyer Neel Lane said.
San Antonio was home to an acrimonious debate last year over extending the citys non-discrimination ordinance to cover sexual orientation. But there were no chanting activists waving signs outside the John H. Wood, Jr. U.S. Courthouse this morning. Only a short line for the metal detector and a few people in the packed courtroom with the words NO H8? on their cheeks suggested this was the opening day of a potentially momentous case in Texas.
The national mood toward marriage equality has changed dramatically even since 2005, when three-quarters of Texas voters supported a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage. In 2004, Massachusetts became the first state to approve same-sex marriage, and after a decade, 16 more states plus Washington, D.C. have followed suit. With the case heard this morning, Texas joins the ranks of states forced to defend their bans in courtmany of them launched since 2013, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act that defines marriage as between a man and a woman.
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Full article here: http://www.texasobserver.org/couples-challenge-texas-sex-marriage-ban-court/
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Couples Challenge Texas’ Same Sex Marriage Ban in Court (Original Post)
Tx4obama
Feb 2014
OP
Tx4obama
(36,974 posts)1. Be sure not to miss this part...
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The plaintiffs, sitting just behind their lawyers, furrowed their brows and exchanged skeptical looks as Murphy laid out the states caseparticularly as he explained that Texas law is not meant to discriminate against same-sex couples, but to promote responsible procreation.
Barry Chasnoff, another of the plaintiffs lawyers, called that argument ludicrous, recalling his aunt who married when she was 80 years old, and never had to prove she could have kids. That was the only line this morning that drew laughs from the courtroom this morning, but the point underscored a serious difference between the two sides definition of marriage: Murphy suggested Texas interest in marriage was about making more Texans, while the plaintiffs lawyers noted there are lots of other reasons two people might want to marryand by the way, same-sex couples (lots of them) raise kids in Texas too.
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